Recipe Series
Recipe Category: Hot Main Dish
Meat ‘n Double Beans Casserole
Yield: 2 servings, about 1 1/2 cups each
1/4 pound raw lean ground beef or ground turkey (or
about 3 ounces cooked)
1/4 medium onion, chopped
2/3 cup canned pork & beans in tomato sauce
2 teaspoons brown sugar or crushed pineapple
2 teaspoons prepared mustard
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
1 medium raw potato, diced
1 cup frozen cut greens beans
2 tablespoons shredded cheddar or colby cheese
1. Wash your hands and work area.
2. In a skillet sprayed with non-stick cooking spray,
brown ground meat over medium heat. Drain off
and discard fat.
3. Add onion and cook about 3 minutes, until onion
softens. Remove from heat.
4. Meanwhile, remove and discard the chunk of pork
from canned pork and beans. In a mixing bowl,
mix together all ingredients very well.
5. Pour mixture into a 1 or 1.5 quart microwave-safe
dish that has been sprayed with non-stick cooking
spray. Cover and cook in a microwave oven on
high power for 6 minutes, stirring after 3 minutes.
(Or, cover and bake in a conventional oven at 350
degrees F. for 1 hour, stirring after 30 minutes.)
6. Serve when thoroughly hot and potatoes are
tender.
7. Cover and refrigerate leftovers within two hours.
Or, if desired, leftovers may be frozen in a
moisture-proof freezer container.
Meal suggestion:
Serve with angel food
cake topped with
yogurt and mixed
berries.
This lean main dish is
an excellent source of
vitamin C, iron and
dietary fiber. It is a
good source of
calcium and vitamin
A.
3 carbohydrate
choices per serving.
For more information about healthy eating, contact your local extension office or log on to www.ksre.ksu.edu/humannutrition/
The Food Assistance Program can help people of all ages with low income buy nutritious foods for a better diet. To find out
more, call 1-888-369-4777. Recipe developed by Mary Meck Higgins, Ph.D., R.D., L.D., CDE, Associate Professor, Dept. of Human Nutrition, Kansas State University
Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service, Manhattan, KS. Contents of this publication may be reproduced for educational purposes. All other rights reserved.
In each case, credit Mary Meck Higgins, “VYP Recipe Series,” Feb. 2009. This material was funded by USDA’s Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. Kansas State University is an
equal opportunity provider and employer. Kansas State University, County Extension Councils, Extension Districts and the U.S. Department of Agriculture Cooperating.